2010-08-26

[DIV28M] REMINDER - Doctoral dissertation survey - Participation requested

**This is a reminder: There is still one week left to participate in this survey.  Your responses are greatly appreciated and valued.  If you have already filled out the survey, thank you so very much and please disregard this message. **

 

Hello,
 
My name is Sarah Randall and I am a doctoral candidate at Pepperdine University in the Clinical Psychology program.  I would like to invite you to participate in a short survey that I am conducting as part of my doctoral dissertation.  

 
My study is investigating psychologists' use of, familiarity, and comfort with Alcoholics Anonymous Slogans in psychotherapy.  Results will be helpful in better understanding common practices used by psychologists in the field.  This study has been approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) at Pepperdine University.
 
The survey should take between 8-10 minutes, depending on the nature of your responses.  In order to qualify for the survey you must currently be seeing patients for at least 5 hours/week face-to-face.  Psychologists and psychology students are encouraged to participate.
 
When you click on the link below, you will be taken directly to the survey.  Once you begin the survey, please complete all of the questions, as your responses will not be saved if you begin again at a later time.  At the outset, you will see a document outlining your rights as a participant and the limits of confidentiality.  Please read this carefully.  You must either select "Agree" or "Disagree" to continue on to the survey. 
 
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/CLCT3X2
 
If you have any questions about this survey you may contact me sarah.randall@pepperdine.edu or my dissertation chair, Robert deMayo, Ph.D., ABPP, Associate Dean of Psychology, robert.demayo@pepperdine.edu .  I greatly appreciate your time and thoughtful responses.  Thank you very much for your participation.
 
Sincerely,
 
Sarah Randall, M.A.
Psychological Assistant, PSB 35189
Doctoral Candidate
Pepperdine University
sarah.randall@pepperdine.edu

2010-08-24

[DIV28SUPER] APA Psychological Science Agenda - August 2010

American Psychological Association
Psychological Science Agenda
A monthly publication of the APA Science Directorate
August 2010 | Vol. 24, No. 8

GOVERNMENT RELATIONS UPDATE


ANNOUNCEMENTS


RESEARCH FUNDING


September PSA – full issue
Please note that as the annual APA Convention takes place in August, the current issue of PSA only includes updated announcements and research funding listings. Look for our full-length issues to resume in September.


2010-08-19

[DIV28M] Doctoral dissertation survey - Participation requested

Hello,
 
My name is Sarah Randall and I am a doctoral student at Pepperdine University in the Clinical Psychology program.  I would like to invite you to participate in a short survey that I am conducting as part of my doctoral dissertation.
 
My study is investigating psychologists' use of, familiarity, and comfort with Alcoholics Anonymous Slogans in psychotherapy.  Results will be helpful in better understanding common practices used by psychologists in the field. 
 
The survey should take between 8-10 minutes, depending on the nature of your responses.  In order to qualify for the survey you must currently be seeing patients for at least 5 hours/week face-to-face.  Psychologists and psychology students are encouraged to participate.
 
When you click on the link below, you will be taken directly to the survey.  Once you begin the survey, please complete all of the questions, as your responses will not be saved if you begin again at a later time.  At the outset, you will see a document outlining your rights as a participant and the limits of confidentiality.  Please read this carefully. 
 
https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/CLCT3X2
 
If you have any questions about this survey you may contact me sarah.randall@pepperdine.edu or my dissertation chair, Robert deMayo, Ph.D., ABPP, Associate Dean of Psychology, robert.demayo@pepperdine.edu .  I greatly appreciate your time and thoughtful responses.  Thank you very much for your participation.
 
Sincerely,
 
Sarah Randall, M.A.
Psychological Assistant, PSB 35189
Doctoral Candidate
Pepperdine University
sarah.randall@pepperdine.edu

2010-08-17

[DIV28SUPER] Fw: [DIV38] IMPORTANT FUNDING ANNOUNCEMENT: Three OppNet RFAs released August 17, 2010

----- Original Message -----
From: Division 38 Members list <DIV38@LISTS.APA.ORG>
To: DIV38@LISTS.APA.ORG <DIV38@LISTS.APA.ORG>
Sent: Tue Aug 17 14:04:22 2010
Subject: [DIV38] IMPORTANT FUNDING ANNOUNCEMENT: Three OppNet RFAs released August 17, 2010





Patricia Clem Kobor

Sr. Science Policy Analyst

American Psychological Association

750 First Street, NE

Washington, DC 20002

(202) 336-5933

(202) 336-6063-f

pkobor@apa.org

P Please consider the environment before printing this email.

________________________________

# # # # # # #



Three additional OppNet FY2011 RFAs are available to the public. At present, there are seven active OppNet funding opportunities. For brief descriptions and links to these RFAs released on August 17, please see below.



OppNet, NIH's Basic Behavioral and Social Science Opportunity Network, makes each of its funding opportunities available through one of its 24 member Institutes and Centers (ICs). Consequently, the NIH IC that makes each FOA/RFA available to the public is not necessarily the NIH Institute or Center that ultimately will manage a funded OppNet project. For more information about OppNet, visit http://oppnet.nih.gov <https://mail.nih.gov/owa/redir.aspx?C=cd86627a587843a48c09589ced30db2e&URL=http%3a%2f%2foppnet.nih.gov> . To register for OppNet's free conference October 28-29, 2010, visit, http://oppnet.nih.gov/news-102810.asp <https://mail.nih.gov/owa/redir.aspx?C=cd86627a587843a48c09589ced30db2e&URL=http%3a%2f%2foppnet.nih.gov%2fnews-102810.asp>





RFA-HL-11-035 <http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-HL-11-035.html>

Basic mechanisms influencing behavioral maintenance (R01)



This OppNet FOA solicits (R01) research applications examining basic mechanisms of behavioral maintenance. The intent of this FOA is to advance research on basic processes and mechanisms involved in sustaining learned behavior over time and in the context of dynamic environmental influences and changing psychological and biological states. Maintenance of health behavior change is a critical problem in applied clinical research, and innovative strategies to address this problem require a better understanding of basic processes and mechanisms involved in long-term behavior maintenance. This FOA requests applications that will improve our understanding of how newly learned, effortful, and goal-directed behaviors transition to less effortful, automatic, and essentially non-goal-directed behaviors that are more easily maintained over time. A range of possible processes and mechanisms (e.g., neurobiological, cognitive, and environmental) may be proposed for study, and applicants are encouraged to study multiple mechanisms and their potential interactions. Regardless of mechanisms or processes of interest, however, applications should test how these mechanisms and processes facilitate or impede the transition from newly learned, effortful, and goal-directed behaviors to less effortful, automatic, and essentially non-goal-directed behaviors. A wide array of research proposals are potentially appropriate under this FOA, ranging from animal neurobehavioral models to human learning studies of social and environmental influences that facilitate or impede the transition to habitually maintained behaviors.



RFA-HL-11-034 <http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-HL-11-034.html>

Development of comprehensive and conceptually-based measures of psychosocial stress (R21)



This OppNet FOA solicits Research Project Grant (R21) applications from institutions and organizations that propose to develop and validate conceptually-focused and comprehensive measures of psychosocial stress that can be applied across species and across the lifespan. Applicants submitting applications under this FOA are encouraged to incorporate variations in exposures, chronicity, environments (including toxicants and social environments), cognitions, and responses, as well as capture important factors for measuring stress in both humans and animals, in men and women, and across the lifespan. Such studies should demonstrate that the measures, coupled with appropriate bridges between laboratory and population-based designs, advance our understanding of the components of psychosocial stressors that are most relevant to disease, and provide comparability across studies.





RFA-HL-11-033 <http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-HL-11-033.html>

Psychosocial stress and behavior: Integration of behavioral and physiological processes (R01)



This OppNet FOA solicits (R01) applications that propose to investigate the mechanistic pathways linking psychosocial stressors and behavior. This research will facilitate investigation of multiple and potentially bidirectional pathways underlying the link between psychosocial stressors and behaviors that may ultimately impact biological function, health, and disease. OppNet encourages applicants to use model systems and longitudinal approaches to design innovative and integrative studies to elucidate how psychological factors, social factors, and environments impact the processes by which stressors are coupled with and influenced by various behaviors. Applications examining moderating factors such as individual demographic (age, gender/sex, ethnicity) and psychological (vulnerabilities, resilience) differences, risk factors, early exposure, and environments (including toxicants) are desirable. This research will provide a deeper understanding of the psychological, environmental, and social processes that ultimately connect psychosocial stress to behaviors, physiological processes, health, and disease.





William N. Elwood, Ph.D.

william.elwood@nih.hhs.gov <https://mail.nih.gov/owa/redir.aspx?C=cd86627a587843a48c09589ced30db2e&URL=mailto%3awilliam.elwood%40nih.hhs.gov>

301-402-0116



OppNet Facilitator

OppNet is NIH's Opportunity Network for basic behavioral and social science research grants: http://oppnet.nih.gov <https://mail.nih.gov/owa/redir.aspx?C=cd86627a587843a48c09589ced30db2e&URL=http%3a%2f%2foppnet.nih.gov%2f>



Register for our conference on October 28-29, 2010: http://oppnet.nih.gov/news-102810.asp <https://mail.nih.gov/owa/redir.aspx?C=cd86627a587843a48c09589ced30db2e&URL=http%3a%2f%2foppnet.nih.gov%2fnews-102810.asp>

[DIV28SUPER] IMPORTANT FUNDING ANNOUNCEMENT: Three OppNet RFAs released August 17, 2010

 

 

Patricia Clem Kobor

Sr. Science Policy Analyst

American Psychological Association

750 First Street, NE

Washington, DC 20002

(202) 336-5933

(202) 336-6063-f

pkobor@apa.org

P Please consider the environment before printing this email.


# # # # # # #

 

Three additional OppNet FY2011 RFAs are available to the public.  At present, there are seven active OppNet funding opportunities.  For brief descriptions and links to these RFAs released on August 17, please see below.

 

OppNet, NIH’s Basic Behavioral and Social Science Opportunity Network, makes each of its funding opportunities available through one of its 24 member Institutes and Centers (ICs).  Consequently, the NIH IC that makes each FOA/RFA available to the public is not necessarily the NIH Institute or Center that ultimately will manage a funded OppNet project.  For more information about OppNet, visit http://oppnet.nih.gov.  To register for OppNet’s free conference October 28-29, 2010, visit, http://oppnet.nih.gov/news-102810.asp

 

 

RFA-HL-11-035

Basic mechanisms influencing behavioral maintenance (R01)

 

This OppNet FOA solicits (R01) research applications examining basic mechanisms of behavioral maintenance.  The intent of this FOA is to advance research on basic processes and mechanisms involved in sustaining learned behavior over time and in the context of dynamic environmental influences and changing psychological and biological states.  Maintenance of health behavior change is a critical problem in applied clinical research, and innovative strategies to address this problem require a better understanding of basic processes and mechanisms involved in long-term behavior maintenance.  This FOA requests applications that will improve our understanding of how newly learned, effortful, and goal-directed behaviors transition to less effortful, automatic, and essentially non-goal-directed behaviors that are more easily maintained over time.  A range of possible processes and mechanisms (e.g., neurobiological, cognitive, and environmental) may be proposed for study, and applicants are encouraged to study multiple mechanisms and their potential interactions.  Regardless of mechanisms or processes of interest, however, applications should test how these mechanisms and processes facilitate or impede the transition from newly learned, effortful, and goal-directed behaviors to less effortful, automatic, and essentially non-goal-directed behaviors.  A wide array of research proposals are potentially appropriate under this FOA, ranging from animal neurobehavioral models to human learning studies of social and environmental influences that facilitate or impede the transition to habitually maintained behaviors. 

 

RFA-HL-11-034

Development of comprehensive and conceptually-based measures of psychosocial stress (R21)

 

This OppNet FOA solicits Research Project Grant (R21) applications from institutions and organizations that propose to develop and validate conceptually-focused and comprehensive measures of psychosocial stress that can be applied across species and across the lifespan. Applicants submitting applications under this FOA are encouraged to incorporate variations in exposures, chronicity, environments (including toxicants and social environments), cognitions, and responses, as well as capture important factors for measuring stress in both humans and animals, in men and women, and across the lifespan.  Such studies should demonstrate that the measures, coupled with appropriate bridges between laboratory and population-based designs, advance our understanding of the components of psychosocial stressors that are most relevant to disease, and provide comparability across studies.

 

 

RFA-HL-11-033

Psychosocial stress and behavior: Integration of behavioral and physiological processes (R01)

 

This OppNet FOA solicits (R01) applications that propose to investigate the mechanistic pathways linking psychosocial stressors and behavior.  This research will facilitate investigation of multiple and potentially bidirectional pathways underlying the link between psychosocial stressors and behaviors that may ultimately impact biological function, health, and disease.  OppNet encourages applicants to use model systems and longitudinal approaches to design innovative and integrative studies to elucidate how psychological factors, social factors, and environments impact the processes by which stressors are coupled with and influenced by various behaviors.  Applications examining moderating factors such as individual demographic (age, gender/sex, ethnicity) and psychological (vulnerabilities, resilience) differences, risk factors, early exposure, and environments (including toxicants) are desirable.  This research will provide a deeper understanding of the psychological, environmental, and social processes that ultimately connect psychosocial stress to behaviors, physiological processes, health, and disease.

 

 

William N. Elwood, Ph.D.

william.elwood@nih.hhs.gov

301-402-0116

 

OppNet Facilitator

OppNet is NIH's Opportunity Network for basic behavioral and social science research grants: http://oppnet.nih.gov

 

Register for our conference on October 28-29, 2010: http://oppnet.nih.gov/news-102810.asp

 

2010-08-16

[DIV28SUPER] FABBS News Highlights 8/16/10

FABBS News Highlights

NSF SBE Directorate Seeks Input on Research Agenda for Next Decade
NSF Assistant Director Myron Gutmann invites the scientific community to “think boldly about future promises” for our sciences and to submit white papers that will address next-generation research challenges.

Read More »
 
 
 
FABBS Twitter Feed is Now Live: Follow Us!
We are pleased to announce that FABBS now has a Twitter feed, and we hope you will follow us.
 
 
 
NIH Seeks Social and Behavioral Scientists For Intramural Research
The National Institutes of Health is currently seeking scientists for tenure-track positions in its intramural program.
 
 
 
NIH To Host OPPNET Conference in October
NIH will host a free, open conference on OPPNET, its trans-NIH basic behavioral and social sciences (b-BSSR) initiative, on October 28-29, 2010 in Washington, DC.

Read More »

 

Upcoming Meetings of FABBS Member Societies

Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
9/27/10 - 10/1/10
San Francisco, CA

Society of Multivariate Experimental Psychology
9/29/10 - 10/2/10
Atlanta, GA

Society for Psychophysiological Research
9/29/10 - 10/3/10
Portland, OR

See More Annual
Meetings »


FABBS Mission Statement
FABBS promotes human potential and well-being by advancing the sciences of mind, brain, and behavior. As a coalition of scientific societies, we communicate with policy makers and the public about the importance and contributions of basic and applied research in these sciences.

 


This message was sent from Federation of Associations in Behavioral & Brain Sciences to div28super@lists.apa.org. It was sent from: FABBS / FABBS Foundation, 750 First St, NE Suite 905, Washington, DC 20002. You can modify/update your subscription via the link below.

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[DIV28SUPER] Behavioral/Cognitive Neuroscie ntist – Wayne State University

Behavioral/Cognitive Neuroscientist – Wayne State University.

As part of the University's initiative to enhance existing programs of excellence, the Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Program in the Department of Psychology invites applications for a tenure-track faculty appointment. Research at all levels of analysis that employ modern neurobiological and neurocognitive techniques is welcome. Successful candidates will be expected to develop an independent, externally funded research program that not only complements and interacts with existing strengths in the department but also stimulates collaborations with other research areas of the department: neurobiology of emotion and social interaction, psychopharmacology, developmental biopsychology, learning and memory, and cognitive processes. Applicants must also have a strong commitment to both undergraduate and graduate education.

Excellent facilities exist for either human or animal research models. Wayne State University is a Carnegie Doctoral/Research University-Extensive located in the cultural center of Detroit within a metropolitan area of five million people. Information about the Department and the University can be found at http://www.clas.wayne.edu/Psychology and http://www.wayne.edu. Review of applications will begin immediately. To receive full consideration, applications should arrive by November 1, 2010.

Applicants should submit a CV, key reprints/preprints, statements of research and teaching interests, and arrange to have three letters of reference sent to R. Douglas Whitman, Chair, Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, 5057 Woodward Avenue, Suite 7908, Detroit, MI 48202. Wayne State is an Affirmative Action/Equal Access/Equal Opportunity Employer that encourages women and minority candidates to apply.


***********************************
Scott E. Bowen, PhD
Chair, Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience
Department of Psychology
Wayne State University
5057 Woodward Ave., Suite 7908
Detroit, MI USA 48202
Office:(313) 577-9546
Lab: (313) 577-8961
FAX:(313) 577-7636
http://sun.science.wayne.edu/~sbowen/


___________________ div28SUPER@lists.apa.org _____________________
Div28m members may post here subscribers corner: http://lists.apa.org

2010-08-12

Re: [DIV28SUPER] Div 28 Hospitality Suite

Dear Matt,

Remind everyone that I need photos of the prizewinners, the officers, those who go to the hospitality suite---everyone---so as I can report on the event on the Web site. i won't be there to do this myself.

Best would be to have several folk doing this, each taking at least two shots of every event. I never have too many pictures to choose from.

Have great meeting,

Vic
-------------------------

On Aug 11, 2010, at 8:37 PM, Matthew Johnson wrote:

> Dear all,
>
> For those of you attending APA, please consider yourself invited to
> the Division 28 hospitality suite on both Friday and Saturday nights,
> from 8:30pm - 11:00pm.
>
> The suite is located at the Marriott Hotel & Marina, room 2300, north tower.
>
> We'll be serving plenty of beverages and food, so the only thing missing is you.
>
> Hope to see you then!
>
> -Matt
>
> ___________________ div28SUPER@lists.apa.org _____________________
> Div28m members may post here subscribers corner: http://lists.apa.org

___________________ div28SUPER@lists.apa.org _____________________
Div28m members may post here subscribers corner: http://lists.apa.org

2010-08-11

[DIV28SUPER] Div 28 Hospitality Suite

Dear all,

For those of you attending APA, please consider yourself invited to
the Division 28 hospitality suite on both Friday and Saturday nights,
from 8:30pm - 11:00pm.

The suite is located at the Marriott Hotel & Marina, room 2300, north tower.

We'll be serving plenty of beverages and food, so the only thing missing is you.

Hope to see you then!

-Matt

___________________ div28SUPER@lists.apa.org _____________________
Div28m members may post here subscribers corner: http://lists.apa.org

[DIV28M] Division 50 Hospitality Suite at APA

The hospitality suite is room 2269, San Diego Marriott Marina.  

See you there!

Please remember that there are going to be some very nice conversation hours and a clinician panel at that location during the convention!

Read below and/or see this link!


CONVERSATION HOUR
Friday, August 13, 2010 10:00 – 11:00 A.M.
A Focus on DSM-V and Substance-Related Disorders with Deborah Hasin


CLINICIAN'S PANEL DISCUSSION -- SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 2010
10:00 A.M. – 11:30 A.M.
Implementing Evidence-Based Addiction Practices in the Real World: Challenges, Successes, and Lessons Learned with Jeff Foote, Tom Horvath, and Patt Denning

CONVERSATION HOUR
Saturday, August 14, 2010 4:15 – 5:15 P.M.
Supervising Trainees in Evidence Based Practices in Addiction with Tony Cellucci

CONVERSATION HOUR
Saturday, August 14, 2010 5:15 – 6:15 P.M.
A.L.E.R.T.S. Addictions: Legal, Ethics, Resources, Training, Self-Care with Raymond Hanbury




Nancy A. Piotrowski, Ph.D.
Core Faculty, General Psychology
Harold Abel School of Social and Behavioral Sciences
Department of Psychology, Capella University
 
President & Website Chair, San Francisco Psychological Association
Co-Chair, Government Affairs Steering Committee, California Psychological Association
 
3450 Geary Boulevard, Suite #107
San Francisco, CA  94118
Phone & FAX by request
 
Email:               napiotrowski@yahoo.com
Skype:              napiotrowski
 
 
 "Not all those who wander are lost..." - J.R.R. Tolkien, 1954.
 

_____________________________ div28m@lists.apa.org
restricted to APA members list archive
twitter: @apadiv28

2010-08-10

[DIV28SUPER] Div. 28 APA conventin schedule

Dear colleagues,

For those attending APA I'm sending along our Div 28 program schedule
one last time. Our full schedule is sometimes included in the summer
newsletter but was not this year, so I want to make sure everybody has
this schedule at the meeting in case you don't want to rely on the
"phone book" APA-wide schedule.

Thanks,
Matt
Div 28 program chair


--
Matthew W. Johnson, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Behavioral Pharmacology Research Unit
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
5510 Nathan Shock Drive
Baltimore, MD 21224-6823
Tel: 410-550-0056
Fax: 410-550-0030
Email: mwj@jhu.edu

___________________ div28SUPER@lists.apa.org _____________________
Div28m members may post here subscribers corner: http://lists.apa.org

[DIV28M] Invitation to Become a Member of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence

Dear Colleagues,

On behalf of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD), I
invite you and your colleagues, students, and trainees to become
members of CPDD.  The College serves as an interface among
governmental, industrial and academic communities maintaining liaisons
with regulatory and research agencies as well as educational,
treatment, and prevention facilities in the drug abuse field.

More information about CPDD and the benefits of becoming a member can
be found in the attached letter.  Also, please visit our website at
http://www.cpdd.vcu.edu/.  I ask that you please forward this message
to your colleagues, students, trainees and fellows who might be
interested in joining CPDD.

Best wishes,

Adam Leventhal
Member, CPDD Membership Committee
adam.leventhal@usc.edu

__________________ Div28m@lists.apa.org ___________________
restricted to APA members subscribers corner: http://lists.apa.org

2010-08-09

[DIV28SUPER] FABBS News Highlights 8/9/10

FABBS News Highlights

NIH Announces New OppNet Funding Opportunities
Ten new RFA’s are expected under OppNet for the coming year, three of which have been posted.

Read More »

 

Work Continues on NAS “Framework” Report
A small group of behavioral and social sciences representatives had a chance to meet with NAS Board of Education staff, the Committee Chair, as well as representatives from the Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education.

Read More »

 

FABBS Foundation Honors Lauren Resnick
Lauren Resnick, EdD, Distinguished University Professor of Psychology and Cognitive Science at  the University of Pittsburgh, is featured in the FABBS Foundation's program which honors eminent, senior scientists.

Read More »

 

The Value of FABBS
FABBS conducts advocacy on behalf of its member societies, interacting with federal science agency staff and Capitol Hill about research needs and opportunities in our sciences. Here we highlight an article written by a member of the FABBS Council of Representatives.

Read More »

 

NIH Launches Multidisciplinary Network on Health Disparities
OBSSR is contracting with the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health to establish a Network on Inequality, Complexity, and Health (NICH).

Read More »

 

Upcoming Meetings of FABBS Member Societies

American Psychological
Association

8/12/10 - 8/15/10
San Diego, CA

Cognitive Science Society
8/11/10 - 8/14/10
Portland, OR

Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
9/27/10 - 10/1/10
San Francisco, CA

Society for Mathematical Psychology
8/8/10 - 8/10/10
Portland, OR

Society of Multivariate Experimental Psychology
9/29/10 - 10/2/10
Atlanta, GA

Society for Psychophysiological Research
9/29/10 - 10/3/10
Portland, OR

See More Annual
Meetings »


FABBS Mission Statement
FABBS promotes human potential and well-being by advancing the sciences of mind, brain, and behavior. As a coalition of scientific societies, we communicate with policy makers and the public about the importance and contributions of basic and applied research in these sciences.



This message was sent from Federation of Associations in Behavioral & Brain Sciences to div28super@lists.apa.org. It was sent from: FABBS / FABBS Foundation, 750 First St, NE Suite 905, Washington, DC 20002. You can modify/update your subscription via the link below.

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